Saab hits brakes amid cash crunch

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Saab Automobile has the capacity to manufacture and sell more cars, but currently lacks the money it needs to do so.

“We could increase production in relation to our intake of orders,” said Saab head Jan Åke Jonsson to the Göteborgs-Posten (GP) newspaper.

Saab is now attempting to move along its application for a 4.6 billion kronor ($592 million) loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB) in hopes of getting access to the financing sooner than previously planned.

Otherwise, the company may have to wait until after a meeting of the EIB board on September 22nd before it receives the first installment of the loan.

The bank doesn't hold a board meeting in August, and it's unlikely that the EIB will have had time to fully review Saab's application prior to a meeting of the board in July.

“We're working with the EIB to see if we can move the decision to July. We haven't ruled it out. If it doesn't happen, we have the ability to adjust our operations so that our money lasts,” said Jonsson.

Today, a meager 100 cars a day are produced in Saab's primary plant in Trollhättan in western Sweden, and without more money, production will likely have to remain at that level.

The Swedish state is also an important party in the EIB negotiations, as Sweden is required by the bank to guarantee the loan. Saab is currently negotiating with Sweden's National Debt Office (Riksgälden) over the conditions for the state guarantees.

But Saab is also talking with the state about a rescue loan, which would provide the company with financing in the short-term.

The Swedish state has previously set aside 5 billion kronor for short-term loans to the country's vehicles industry, but has yet to use it.

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